Health insurers and the Trump administration face a court decision shortly that will determine whether the government must pay insurers billions of dollars despite Republican efforts to block payments they view as an industry bailout.

Humana, Aetna and other providers enhance revenue by shuffling customers among privately managed plans. The tactic, known as crosswalking, adds millions of dollars in federal payments to the companies that sell Medicare Advantage policies.

A House of Representatives committee early Saturday issued its version of “right to try” legislation that would enable a terminally ill patient to use an unproven, investigational drug in an effort to save that person’s life.

The makers of an expensive cholesterol-lowering drug plan to offer discounts of up to 69% in exchange for insurers and pharmacy-benefit managers expanding their coverage of the medicine to more patients.

The Trump administration will step in to enforce the Affordable Care Act’s requirements in Idaho if the state doesn’t back down on its plan to allow the sale of skimpier, less expensive insurance products, a top health official told Idaho on Thursday.

Cigna’s $54 billion deal for Express Scripts is the latest sign that health care’s biggest players believe they can no longer go it alone, and they must branch into other businesses to forge integrated products aimed at curbing costs.

Hospitals scrounging for dollars are reinventing themselves as venture capitalists and investing in health-care technologies. Startups receive support from hospitals hoping to find “the next Bill Gates or Steve Jobs.”

The Trump administration wants any congressional plan to shore up the Affordable Care Act markets to include conservative goals, such as letting insurers charge higher premiums to older people, according to a memo reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

The pharmaceutical company has lost top executives and a chunk of its market cap amid allegations of a conspiracy to illegally distribute an addictive prescription painkiller. But it hasn’t lost all of its following on Wall Street.

Twenty Republican state attorneys general are seeking to overturn the Affordable Care Act in a lawsuit that argues the law is unconstitutional now that Congress has repealed its tax-based penalty on individuals who don’t have health insurance.